Ask questions and get advice. Disclaimer: Any advice you take here is at your own risk. We are not liable for any consequences you might incur from following advice here. Note: Before posting your question, do a search for it in the Google Search box at the top to see if it's been addressed.

I've done some research on teaching abroad, and I've found out that some schools either pay you in cash in the local currency, or they deposit your salary in a local bank account that you set up there.

If you don't want to set up a foreign account, and you're working abroad, what's the best way to deposit money into your bank account in the US with minimal hassle and fees?

Someone told me about using traveller's checks from your local bank, like if you get paid in cash, you could convert the cash into TC's to transfer to your bank account in the US.

Boner_Jones wrote:I've done some research on teaching abroad, and I've found out that some schools either pay you in cash in the local currency, or they deposit your salary in a local bank account that you set up there.

If you don't want to set up a foreign account, and you're working abroad, what's the best way to deposit money into your bank account in the US with minimal hassle and fees?

Someone told me about using traveller's checks from your local bank, like if you get paid in cash, you could convert the cash into TC's to transfer to your bank account in the US.

Use an international bank with local branches. Talk to them and see what services they can offer you.

Boner_Jones wrote:I've done some research on teaching abroad, and I've found out that some schools either pay you in cash in the local currency, or they deposit your salary in a local bank account that you set up there.

If you don't want to set up a foreign account, and you're working abroad, what's the best way to deposit money into your bank account in the US with minimal hassle and fees?

Someone told me about using traveller's checks from your local bank, like if you get paid in cash, you could convert the cash into TC's to transfer to your bank account in the US.

Use an international bank with local branches. Talk to them and see what services they can offer you.

I used HSBC, they have branches in US, Mexico, Asia, etc.

Yeah, but I just want to minimize the hassles, and keep only one account (here in the US) for now, without adding another one, even if it's an international one. I just want to know if I can transfer most of my overseas salary to my US bank account, with minimal fees, and without setting up an additional bank account. Plus, what will this mean when I have to file my US taxes?

Boner Jones, what is wrong with opening a new account? If you have a US based account like Bank of America, you have to open another account in a foreign country. Just pick a bank you trust like HSBC or Citibank. I use Citibank, but their minimum balance requirements have been increased a lot.

Most expats here do that. When they transfer balances, they just write a check from one bank to another and deposit it that way. If you use an ATM abroad for a US based bank, you will be hit with multiple fees from both sides.

That's the only way to do it.

It isn't hard to get used to having two banks. You will get used to it.

Remember that part of being successful abroad requires flexibility and adaptability, not rigidness. Darwin said that it's not the strong that survive, but those who adapt best.

"It takes far less effort to find and move to the society that has what you want than it does to try to reconstruct an existing society to match your standards." - Harry Browne, How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World